is At V rzA+ INEEM N 10 ILFEDE RALS CON+TIN UE STEADY ROU7T OF INSURGEN'dTS C!3YOOYLL0UDNSIOBEH rvrnu Ihat "bootlegging in[ nes ."...' AL ALK education",e consisting in the lea ae OF FOREIGN ALTED BY PLAN >tand English,'arnd in s uc h of delinquency, admission is Edmonson, Morris, Curtiss To Talk On Twenty-Sccond Michigan Night Program UNION ORCHESTRA TO PLAY Talks by three members of the University. faculty and a musical program to be presented by the Union dance orchestra will com- prise the 22nd Michigan Night radio program to be broadcast be- tween 7 and 8 o'clock tonight from the Morris hall studio through WJR, the "Good Will Station" of the Richards Oakland company, Detroit. James B. Edmonson, dean of the School of Education,. professor of secondary education, and director of the Division of University in-, spection of High Schools, willI speak on the subject-"TheOldI Versus the, New in. School Educa- tion." The second talk of the program will be delivered by Prof. Amos R. Morris of the rhetoric department. Professor Morris, author of "The Orchestration of 'the Metrical Under the auspices of the College entrance of foreign students into iu Uy the uiveiies, omen after the candidate has come to the United States in violation of I America, either surreptitiously, or of Architecture Prof. JohnnyRoos-the Immigration Act of 1924, may in a legal manner, the plan will be of t University of Stockholm be further curbed, a committee of in the form of a test to determine will deliver three lectures at 4:15 the College Entrance Examination the candidates' aural and speaking on the afternons of March 25, 26, board will meet next Saturday in knowledge of English. New York for the purpose of en- While a majority of the foreign and 27 in th' ground floor lecture- larging a plan whereby the tBoard students are from Europe, a for- room of the: architectural building. will sponsor English comprehen- midable percentage of them are He was expected to speak here last 'sion examinations in various cen. from other parts of the world. It 'ters of the world. is planned, therefore, to establish hisy visituntl' now. The lecturer The direct impetus of this action centers of exafnination at certain has just completed a course of lec- was due to the inability of the favorably located cities. To these tares at Princeton university customs officials to effectively limit points the candid'ates may .come ur a P the number of non-quota immi- for the test. If they competently The srAbjects. whieh Professor grant students by regulating the pass the 'examination, an admis- Roosval will present are "Roman- number of visas issued. In the sion card will be granted to the esque Pchitecture in Sweden and year immediately following the in- applicant,- which will be his sole DenmfArk," "Mural Painting in stigation of the immigration act means 'of gaining admission to any Swed ish Churches," and "Sculpture an increase of almost 200 foreign accredited American University. of spain and Southern France in students was evinced by -the ad- ' Ira M. Smith, 'registrar of the h': Eleventh and Twelfth Cen- mission records of the accredited University, is a member of the ,dries" respectively, on the three American Universities. committee which will meet next days. Accordingly, a plan has been for- ,Saturday at New York, and has ex- Professor Roosval is in charge of mulated, which will enable the ad- pressed an opinion heartily in favor the Zorn collection at the Univer- mission officials of the Universities of the proposed 'plan to quelch sur- sity of Stockholm and is also en- to determine the competence of reptitious "bootlegging in educa- gaged in.research activity. His re- foreign applicants for college en- tion". search has had to do largely with trance before they have left their medieval architectural remains in Inative lands. The proposed device KANSAS STATE .A G R I C 'U L - Sweden, but he has written on is as follows: ,Inasmuch as in the I TURAL COLLEGE.-The men here many subjects and is one Sweden's majority of cases foreign students placed themselves as firmly op- first authorities on ancient and seek admission before they are posed to the stockingless fad now modern art and archaeology. adequately qualified to speak and raging among the co-eds. a x t 1 :,, a . a t r 1 Line," believes that the language With a large federal army under battle impends. Above, a federa army barracks at Torreon. It was arts may be taught by an analysis War Minister Plutarco Calles mov- battery rushed from Mexico City tc at Torreon- where Villa fought the of. vibrations caused by human ing in attack on Torreon, north bombard Torreon. Lower left, E decisive battle in 1912 bringing speech sounds which carry intel- Mexican key city, and rebel forces detachment of federal cavalry ir about the downfall of the Huerta lectual and emotional content. rallying to its defense, a decisive the Torreon sector. Lower right ;overnment. Ultimately, -English composition'--- will be taught in a laboratory 1 PIPE CO LECTING are Mozart among the earlier com- covering new poets and painters. says--hence he has chosen as his Jtposers and Strawinsky among the j But' at the end of the interview topic, "What is a Rhetoric Labora- I JACKSDHOBBY later ones. Professor Jack admitted that he tory." =-Within his work, however, Pro- had a genuine hobby. It is the Prof. Ralph H. Curtiss, of the Rhetoric Department Head Also fessor Jack evidences several pe- colleting of pipes. Included in his astronomy department, will give Interested In Music, Books, culiarities or eccentricities. in the j"fuming" fortune are about 120 the final address speaking on Painting, And Drama realm of books, where so much of pipes, twenty of which he has here, "Mars Again." Professor Curtiss is his time is spent, he has what and about a hundred at home in the director of the University Ob- "I have no hobbies," answered might be termed a hobby. It is the 'England. But in ranking the types servatory. Prof. Peter M. Jack, of the rhetoric collecting of first editions. Any one of pipes he places the purely The Union dance orchestra will department, when the question of who has ever attempted to pur- American contribution first-the again provide the music for the what he did in his spare time as a 'chase a first edition will realize corn cob. Next comes the, cherry broadcast tonight. The orchestra, hobby was asked him. "I am for- what an expensive hobby this is. pipe, and then the clay pire. His under the direction of Paul Omer tunate in being engaged in a work The first editions he specializes in taste prefers Craven Miture, a and Don Loomis and directed by which is to most people a hobby,"., are those of the eighteenth cen- blend imported from England, Bill Suthers, will present a series he continued. Professor Jack's Itury and those of contemporary which should make it appear like of dance numbers. work in the rhetoric department is f editions. He also delights in dis- Ianother expensive hobby. t, ______a rather overlaid occupation, cov- University of Hawaii.-Freshmen ering a large field. His work in- at the tniversity of Hawaii have a cludes an interest in music, paint- hard tine. The boys must carry ing, and drama. His interest in two brands of cigarettes in a nice music, he claims, is not a hobby clean sock, altogether without either, but rather an integral part -holes. The girls, are required to of his work. Evenings Professor wear grass skirts and goggles and Jack is very fond of spending with to always be plentifully supplied the radio, listening to' his favorite with favorite brands of jellybeans. composers, the headliners of which r { n Mothe1r s s . . .. ,, ,x r .,'_ i r 4. I I it!] it I lttrmV'TTRrMTrMMm rumirrum I I ITIT I I 77TM II 1 1, 111 1 11 1 11 11 1 R , I Tf 9 1 TIT I I TF . f U I I F1 H RTTIl f I . 111111111 1111 z I 111117T RTMTI f I I I I I Iff I I I I I I'l I i I Classified A dvertising rIIIN ._.-ti D HEINES BLEND For diisuriinating pipe smokers who enjoy an even, mild smoke com- bined with a distinctive, fragrant aroma. Distribuled 13ly it qj Brig esult s -- . . . HUSTON BROS. 307-309 S. State St. POOP GO OCw.00 leaid tie CLA'sified Ads The Class iied Coltmn sells, rcitlo7ts 5 t y. L 1 Ii =1?b+, .i 16t V , .V . a.a w ~ tl i111IIIallllf '111f1lEI~ 1111 I ~ ll lil~ lll111 111 fin for tk 1 EMBLEM -r . - aIIdY 111!! 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